A Day in Music History
October 8th...
Barrie Wilson A.K.A, B.J Wilson
March 18, 1947 - October 8, 1990 (aged 43)
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Births
1934: Doc Green (The Drifters)
1940: Fred Cash (The Impressions)
1941: George Bellamy (The Tornadoes)
1941: Dave Arbus (East Of Eden)
1942: Buzz Clifford
1944: Susan Raye
1945: Ray Royer (Procol Harum)
1945: Butch Rillera (Redbone)
1947: Tony Wilson (Hot Chocolate)
1949: Hamish Stuart (The Average White Band)
1950: Robert "Kool" Bell (Kool and the Gang)
Deaths
1990: Barrie Wilson (Procol Harum)
Events
1935: Bandleader Ozzie Nelson marries his lead vocalist,
Harriet Hilliard.
1962: Joining what he is told is a gospel music tour in
England with Sam Cooke, Little Richard instead finds himself part of a rock and
roll revue (featuring a young Billy Preston on keyboards). Cooke's popularity
with his secular set convinces Richard to return to rock, and his self-imposed
exile is ended... for the first time, anyway.
1966: Cream drummer Ginger Baker collapses while on stage at
a Sussex University gig in England, just after completing his epic 20-minute
solo on "Toad."
1968: "Mama" Cass Elliot's initial solo engagement
at Caesars' Palace is a disaster, with Elliot collapsing from exhaustion and
her backup band ill-rehearsed. While hospitalized, she contracts tonsillitis,
forcing the cancellation of the entire two-week engagement.
1977: NBC airs The Paul Simon Special, which again reunites
the singer with old friend Art Garfunkel.
1985: Little Richard passes out behind the wheel while
driving his sports car in West Hollywood and runs into a telephone pole,
seriously injuring him and forcing him to miss his induction in the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame. After he recovers, he returns yet again to spiritual music.
1987: The acclaimed Chuck Berry documentary Hail! Hail! Rock
'n' Roll premieres in US theaters on the same day that Berry himself is awarded
a star on the Hollywood Walk Of Fame at 1777 N. Vine.
1987: Promoting their space-themed Afterburner record, ZZ
Top book passage on what is announced as the first passenger flight to the
moon.
1988: The Rolling Stones' Keith Richards performs his first
solo single, "Take It So Hard," on tonight's episode of Saturday
Night Live.
1989: After Rolling Stone Ron Wood suggested the Who were
reforming for the money alone, Who guitarist Pete Townshend publicly answered:
"Mick needs a lot more than I do. His last album was a flop,"
referring to the Stones' legendary miscue Dirty Work.
1992: The US Postal Service issues a booklet of
commemorative rock and roll stamps featuring Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly, Otis
Redding, Bill Haley, Ritchie Valens, Clyde McPhatter, and Dinah Washington.
Releases
1979: Fleetwood Mac, Tusk
Recording
1941: Benny Goodman, "Buckle Down Winsocki"
1957: Jerry Lee Lewis, "Great Balls Of Fire"
1964: The Beatles, "She's A Woman"
1968: The Beatles, "Long Long Long," "I'm So
Tired," "The Continuing Story Of Bungalow Bill"
Charts
1955: The Four Aces' "Love Is A Many-Splendored
Thing" hits #1
1977: Billy Joel's LP The Stranger enters the charts
Certifications
1974: Dionne Warwick and The Spinners' "Then Came
You" is certified gold
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